- William Larminie
William Larminie (
1 August 1849 -19 January 1900 ) was an Irishpoet andfolklorist .He was born in
Castlebar ,County Mayo , ofHuguenot descent and was educated at Kingstown School andTrinity College Dublin , from which he graduated in 1871 with a moderatorship in classics. He moved to London while he was employed in the BritishIndia Office from 1873 until 1887, at which point he retired and returned to Ireland to devote himself to writing, settling inBray ,County Wicklow .He published two volumes of poetry - "Glanlua and Other Poems" (1889), and "Fand and Other Poems" (1890) - as well as a collection of stories which he had collected from local people in
County Donegal ,County Mayo andCounty Galway : "West Irish Folk-Tales and Romances" (1893).Like his contemporaries
John Todhunter andWilliam Butler Yeats , he turned toIrish mythology for inspiration. His most famous poem is "The Nameless Doon" ('Who were the builders? Question not the silence that settles on the lake for evermore'), about a stoneringfort , over 4000 years old and long abandoned, in Drumboghill, County Donegal. He attempted in his poetry to adopt some of the traditional Irish verse forms such as the use of assonance.In his later years he devote himself to a translation into English of the Irish philosopher
John Scottus Eriugena 's "De divisione naturae". His translation, which was never published, was deposited in theNational Library of Ireland .He died at his home in Bray and is buried in
Enniskerry .References
"Oxford Dictionary of National Biography", William Larminie
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